Architecture and Beads

Eva Maria Keiser found beadwork the way many of us found polymer—serendipitously, without the intention of becoming a bead artist. Somehow she saw in it a way to mix her passion for color and for architecture at the same time and she became obsessed. Familiar story, isn’t it?

Eva Maria pulls together a wide variety of shapes and colors by making every element in her work structural. She has the added advantage of doing it all with small seed beads which, of course, is one thing that will be consistent throughout the pieces. She also works with symmetry, creating symmetrically round forms with all kinds of shapes jutting and growing off the central round containment of the vessel.

But mostly I just love the imagination that is evident in her work. Take a moment this afternoon to take a look at her website and, if you’re into seed beads, she has quite a number of tutorials to share with you.

Sage

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